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This image taken July 14, 2008 by the
Surface Stereo Imager on Phoenix Mars Lander shows the silver colored rasp
protruding from the lander's robotic arm scoop.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, July 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Mission
officials say most of a sample of icy soil collected by the robotic arm of
NASA's Phoenix Mars lander apparently got stuck in the scoop and would not fall
into a tiny oven intended to heat it for analysis.
The arm picked up 3 cubic centimeters of material
Friday night and lifted it over the oven, tilted the scoop, ran a tool motor to
try to sprinkle the sample into the oven, and finally inverted the scoop
directly over the oven's open doors.
But the science instrument, called the Thermal and
Evolved-Gas Analyzer, detected that not enough material fell inside and so the
oven doors did not close.
The lander then transmitted images Saturday morning
showing soil stuck in the scoop.
"We believe that the material that was intended for
the targeted cell is the material that adhered to the back of the scoop,"
Phoenix project manager Barry Goldstein, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, said in a statement.
A short-circuit occurred weeks ago when shaking was
used to try to get a previous sample into another of Phoenix's eight tiny test
ovens and there had been concern that the vibrating action might cause a
short-circuit again this time, but that did not occur.
"The good news here is TEGA is functioning nominally,
and we will adjust our sample drop-off strategy to run this again," Goldstein
said.
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A NASA handout image shows the Robotic
Arm on NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander with a sample of martian
soil.(Xinhua/AFP Photo) Photo
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Mission officials planned to command the lander to
take pictures on Sunday to determine if any more of the soil fell out of the
scoop later on.
Saturday marked the lander's 60th Martian day, known
as a sol, on the Red Planet's northern arctic plain.
The 420 million dollar mission hopes to find out
whether the icy Martian soil contains the chemical ingredients necessary for
life. The results from the heating test that was carried out several weeks ago
showed water vapor and carbon dioxide, but no signs of carbon.
JPL is managing the Phoenix Mars project. The mission
is being led by chief scientist Peter Smith of the University of Arizona in
Tucson.
(Agencies)